Monggo Menu

The History of Chocolate

1900 BC - The Origin of Chocolate.The origin of chocolate dates back almost 4000 years ago in Mesoamerica, the exact origin in the Americas is unknown, but archaeological evidence of ceramic vessels with residues from the preparation of cocoa beverages have been found at archaeological sites dating back to the Mokaya and Olmec Civilisations along the Orinoco river.

1000 BC - The Trees Earliest Known Name"Kakawa," came into use among the Olmec, the people of the Mexican Gulf Coast who built the first of the great Mesoamerican civilizations. It is likely that the Olmec were also already cultivating the tree.

100 AD - The Word “Cocoa”The Maya adopted the word "cocoa" from the Olmec and it is also presumed that they also were cultivating cocoa. Taking the Cocoa tree from the rainforest and growing it in their backyards, harvesting, roasting, and then grounding the seeds into a paste. When mixed with water, chilli peppers, cornmeal, and other ingredients, this paste made a foamy, spicy chocolate drink.

600 AD- Chocolate a Status SymbolAround this period, clay chocolate-drinking vessels begin to appear among the grave goods of the Maya nobility, strong evidence that chocolate consumption is an important status symbol.

1000 AD - The Value of CocoaThe people of Central America used cocoa beans as currency as described in Mexican picture scripts, a basket with 8,000 beans represents the figure 8,000. Control of the main cocoa growing regions thus became a prime objective in the intermittent warfare that scars the next several centuries.

1200 – 1500 - The Chocolate WarsBy subjugating the Chimimeken and the Mayas, the Aztecs strengthened their supremacy in Mexico. The Aztec empire annexes the richest cocoa region in Mesoamerica, modern Chiapas (Mexico, Guatemala).The Aztecs refer to chocolate as "xocalatl" meaning warm or bitter liquid.

1502 - Europe Discovers Chocolate First European contact with cocoa beans (fourth voyage of Christopher Columbus), yet its value was not realised.

1528 - Spanish Conquest of Chocolate Spanish conquistador over Aztec, Hernando Cortez returns to Spain with cocoa beans, impressed by the fact that the Aztecs used them as currency. Hernando seeded plantations on Trinidad, Haiti, and the West African island of Bioko to grow “money” to trade with Aztecs for gold. Spain then had a virtual monopoly of the cocoa market for almost a century.

1544 - Mayans Go to SpainA delegation of Kekchi (indigenous) Mayans from Guatemala visit the Spanish court of Prince Philip. Among the gifts are containers of the Mayan chocolate drink, the first recorded appearance of cocoa in the Old World. The Spanish began to add cane sugar and flavorings such as vanilla to their sweet cocoa beverages.

1560 - Cocoa in AsiaThe earliest known introduction of cocoa into Asia; the tree is brought to the island of Sulawesi, in Indonesia, from Caracas, Venezuela.

1657 - A Meeting Place For High SocietyThe first chocolate house opens in London. The high price of cocoa limits access to only the most affluent classes. But as prices fall, establishments of this type multiply and even replace cafes, tearooms and pubs.

1671 - The Origins of the "Praline"The chef of the Duke of Plessis-Praslin accidently spilt boiling melted sugar on ground almonds. Delighted by this, the Duke would give his name to the preparation. The praline is born: a mix based on almonds or shelled nuts, covered in caramel and then ground together. A few centuries later, Belgian chocolatiers improved on this recipe by coating this mix in a chocolate shell.

1674 - The First Cooking ChocolateWhilst chocolate was still only a drink throughout Europe, English confectioners had the idea of adding cocoa to their cake mix. Chocolate is eaten for the first time.

1697 - From Brussels to ZurichThe future Belgium is already a reputed chocolate centre. It is on the Grand-Place in Brussels that the Mayor of Zurich discovers chocolate and decides to introduce it into Switzerland. An initiative that had delicious consequences…

1712 - Chocolate Returns to AmericaAt the turn of the 18th century, chocolate comes back to North America. In little more than a decade, we see the flowering of advertising in Boston for imported chocolate from Europe.

1778 - Cacao Production in Indonesia BeginsThe Dutch bring cocoa from the Philippines to Jakarta and Sumatra, where they establish a propagation facility that soon leads to major production in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia and Malaysia).

1828 - The Creation of CocoaChocolate Revolutionises, the industrial revolution mechanizes chocolate making and brings the price within the public's reach. Conrad Van Houten, a Dutch chemist, learns to press cocoa butter out of chocolate liquor. This allows the production of cocoa powder.

1948 - Eating Chocolate The introduction of cocoa powder not only made creating chocolate drinks much easier, but also later made it possible to combine chocolate with sugar and then remix it with cocoa butter to create a solid. Others began to build on Van Houten's success, experimenting to make new chocolate products. The English manufacturer J.S. Fry & Sons uses cocoa powder to create the first successful mass-produced chocolate bar.

1850 – 1860 - Cocoa Tree EnemyThe cocoa pod borer, a moth whose larvae infest the cocoa fruit, emerges in the Indonesian archipelago. Established plantations are ruined, and production is driven even further into previously undisturbed forest. The borer remains cocoa’s most feared insect pest.

1875 - The First Milk Chocolate BarDaniel Peter and Henri Nestle combine chocolate and milk powder and create the first milk chocolate bar. It is an instant commercial success.

1879 - Conching ChocolateRodolphe Lindt produces chocolate that melts on the tongue. He develops the “conching” process that gives chocolate a smoother texture. In the same year the first really successful introduction of cocoa to the African mainland - Gold Coast (now Ghana) - occurs.

1912 - Chocolate CreationsJean Neuhaus invents a chocolate shell that could be filled with cream or nut pastes. The Belgium pralines are born. In Belgium, chocolate has been considered as a present from its earliest days - something to give or to receive. No wonder that pralines, one of the most popular presents, is a Belgian invention.

2005 - The Creation of Chocolate MonggoThis adventure began in 2001, when a Belgian man arrived in Yogyakarta without a plan in mind. Missing the good Belgian chocolate, he decided to make some specialties of his country. The company Anugerah Mulia started in 2005, under which Chocolate Monggo started to produce chocolate pralines and chocolate bars in Indonesia. Monggo continues to develop more variants of chocolate products, by combining the finest taste of Indonesian ingredients and the knowledge of chocolate from our Belgian Chocolatier...